You should not until reviewed by the courts.
Only if he allows you to.
No
He doesn't. Only the courts can award/enforce visitation.
yes biological fathers may seek visitation and custody rights
Yes, visitation can be stopped if the father has no home.
You don't say how old the child is. What are your reason's for leaving the state. Is this move in the child's best interest. Does the biological father object. Legal papers mean nothing. Are you doing the morally right thing for your daughter and her relationship with her father. If you are moving for financial reasons, just make sure your daughter and her father continue to have on going visitation and contact as often as possible. That is not your right to take away.
In most states the minor under age 14 cannot chose to see or not see said parent. Especially if parents are divorced and have either joint custody or some type of visitation worked out in the court order. However if daughter is under full custody of mother and does not wish to see the father and no visitation rights have been rewarded to the father the daughter does not have to see him. Most time the courts will decide visitation rights and so forth.
Depends on what the div. settlement says but the real question is WHY does she refuse to spend the Summer with her Dad?
If the father has legal visitation rights-no. You can file a petition with the court to change visitation to show cause. You petition him to go to court where you tell the judge why you do not want, what you do not want and the judge will decide.
Yes. If there is a visitation order.Yes. If there is a visitation order.Yes. If there is a visitation order.Yes. If there is a visitation order.
Once paternity is established, the father has the right to request visitation and the courts will ordinarily grant that right. Keep in mind that children are best raised by both parents.
Need to file a petition for visitation. If the father is the biological father he has a right to visitation. There is no court that will not grant visitation to a father. Unless it is proved in court that the father is unfit. There has to be proof of that.